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| Emmanuel Levinas |
From: John Young <jya@pipeline.com>
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 1995 19:14:47 -0500
Subject: Levinas' death
The New York Times, December 27, 1995
Emmanuel Levinas, 90, French Ethical Philosopher
A thinker who placed ethics in the foreground of his
system.
By Peter Steinfels
Emmanuel Levinas, a philosopher and religious thinker who
made ethical responsibility for "the Other" the bedrock of
his philosophical analyses, died of heart failure in Paris
on Monday. He would have been 90 within a few days.
His thought influenced several generations of French
philosophers and, bolstered by his reflections on the
Talmud, won an admiring readership among Jewish and
Christian theologians, among them Pope John Paul II, who
often praised and quoted his work.
Born in Kaunas, Lithuania, of Jewish parents who spoke both
Yiddish and Russian at home, the young scholar went to
France in 1923 at the age of 17 to study at the University
of Strasbourg. In 1928-29 he studied under Edmund Husseri
and Martin Heidegger at the University of Freiburg.
Over the next few years, he introduced the ideas of both
German thinkers to France -- first in a doctoral
dissertation, published in 1930 on the theory of intuition
in Husserl's phenomenology, then in a French translation of
Husserl's "Cartesian Meditations" and finally in a 1932
essay on Heidegger.
Dr. Levinas's own philosophy began to emerge after World
War II. His family in Lithuania died in the Holocaust,
while he, by then a French citizen and soldier, did forced
labor as a prisoner of war in Germany and his wife and
daughter hid in a French monastery.
Like Husserl and Heidegger, Dr. Levinas rejected
philosophy's traditional preoccupation with metaphysical
questions about being and epistemological questions about
how we know. And like them, he rejected attempts at grand
abstract systems of explanation.
He later came to regret his enthusiasm for Heidegger, after
the German philosopher's accommodation to Nazism. In
commenting on a discussion of forgiveness in the Talmud, he
wrote: "One can forgive many Germans, but there are some
Germans it is difficult to forgive. It is difficult to
forgive Heidegger."
Dr. Levinas's alternative to traditional approaches was a
philosophy that made personal ethical responsibility to
others the starting point and primary focus for philosophy,
rather than a secondary reflection that followed
explorations of the nature of existence and the validity of
knowledge.
"Ethics precedes ontology" (the study of being) is a phrase
often used to sum up his stance. Instead of the thinking
"I" epitomized in "I think, therefore I am" -- the phrase
with which Rene Descartes launched much of modern
philosophy -- Dr. Levinas began with an ethical "I." For
him, even the self is possible only with its recognition of
"the Other," a recognition that carries responsibility
toward what is irreducibly different.
Knowledge, for Dr. Levinas must be preceded by an ethical
reiationship. It is a line of thought similar to Martin
Buber's idea of "I and thou," but with the emphasis on a
relationship of respect and responsibility for the other
person rather than a relationship of mutuality and
dialogue.
The French philosopher's critique of other philosophical
currents linked him with French post-modernist thought.
Although his major work, "Totality and Infinity," was
published in France in 1961, it was an essay about him by
Jacques Derrida that brought him a larger audience.
At the same time, the strict emphasis on ethical duty to
"the Other," as well as his commitment to Judaism, his
resort to religious language and his many commentaries on
passages from the Talmud and from the Bible separate Dr.
Levinas from currents of post-modernism often viewed as
radically skeptical or nihilistic.
Rabbi Leon Klenicki praised the French philosopher's
"search for the meaning of Judaism after Auschwitz." He
"was able to unite Talmudic wisdom and phenomenology in a
unique contribution," said Rabbi Klenicki, a leading
participant in dialogues between Jews and Christians.
Dr. Levinas was born on Jan. 12, 1906, under the calendar
then in use in Lithuania, but in France he celebrated his
birthday, using the Western calendar, on Dec. 30. His
father owned a bookshop. The family moved to Ukraine when
World War I broke out but returned to Lithuania after the
Russian Revolution. The future philosopher, who had also
learned to read in Hebrew, graduated from the Jewish
Russian-language lyceum there.
In France, after earning his doctorate, he taught at the
Ecole Normale Israelite Orientale in Paris, a school for
Jewish students, many from traditional backgrounds. After
the war he became director of the school until 1961, when
he took a position at the University of Poitiers, followed
by one at the Nanterre branch of the University of Paris in
1967 and finally one at the Sorbonne in 1973.
He retired in 1979 and devoted himself to writing books
that, according to the French daily paper Liberation,
sometimes sold as many as 200,000 copies.
His writings were filled with strikingly phrased insights
and with key terms and concepts -- reflections, for
example, on the "face of the other," or on "exteriority" or
"moral proximity" -- that reverberated in other
philosophers' writings.
He made some assertions, for instance, about "the
masculine" and "the feminine," that stirred criticism.
Liberation termed him "a man of four cultures": Jewish,
Russian German and French. The World Jewish Congress hailed
him as a philosopher who "never ceased to pursue his quest
for a world morality following the Holocaust."
He is survived by his wife, Raissa, a musician originally
from Vienna, whom he married in 1932. They had a daughter,
Simone Hansel, and a son, Michael.
[end]